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Media > All articles > ESG Initiatives > What is a Sustainability Rating?

What is a Sustainability Rating?

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What is a sustainability rating, why is it important, and how could it prove beneficial for companies trying to push their businesses forward towards greater financial success and sustainability?
ESG / CSR
2023-05-26T00:00:00.000Z
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Sustainability is becoming imperative in the world of business, as customers, investors, and stakeholders are starting to deem things like a sustainability rating as essential when choosing which companies to invest their time and money into.

Sustainability ratings can help companies to be put in a better limelight by demonstrating their efforts towards better environmental and social practices. 

What is a sustainability rating, why is it important, and how could it help companies push their businesses forward towards greater financial success and sustainability?

Why is a sustainability rating important?

A sustainability rating, also referred to at times as an ESG rating, is a way to measure how businesses or organizations a framework of their overall ESG performances – which can help them to improve their sustainability practices and how their efforts towards sustainability can have an impact on their surrounding communities, stakeholders, and nearby environment. Sustainability ratings are usually made by rating agencies that seek to use specific indicators to determine the company’s performance in sustainability. 

A sustainability rating is important as it helps investors, customers, and employees decide if they want to take part in this company’s product or service – such as investors, consumers, and employees. Besides that, a sustainability rating can help companies to be more transparent with all of those involved in their business endeavors, and also help to provide guidelines for companies that want to become more sustainable – ultimately allowing for a positive influence and encouragement to become more sustainable worldwide. 

Although demonstrating a company's efforts towards sustainability are one of the key reasons to get a sustainability rating – a sustainability rating can cover much more than that. A sustainability rating usually covers multiple subjects: such as the amount of carbon emissions a company is responsible for, labor practices including DEI, details regarding their supply chain, how the community engages with the businesses, and corporate governance. A sustainability rating could be provided by various frameworks, such as with the Global Reporting Initiative, or GRI for short, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board, or SASB for short – both of which use different methodologies to arrive at their final sustainability rating. 

👉 Ultimately, a sustainability rating is important as the business world starts to recognise the importance of sustainability in cultivating a successful product or service and to satisfy customers, employees, and stakeholders in how the business impacts the environment.

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Why can a sustainability rating be useful for your company?

Businesses that acquire a high sustainability rating usually experience a multitude of benefits:

  • Better reputation amongst customers and competitors
  • Better access to capital
  • Improved customer experience and loyalty to the company
  • More competitive products and services as a result of enhanced sustainability

However, a poor sustainability rating could also take a toll on a company’s confidence, reputation, and business performance. A bad sustainability rating could result in the following:

  • Poor reputation that could compromise existing customer relationships, employees, and stakeholders
  • Less investments or even investments being pulled from the company
  • Less opportunities for advertising the product or service

👉 A good sustainability rating could do your company a world of good, but a bad sustainability rating could do you company a world of bad. In a sense, a sustainability rating is a lot like having a good friend. A good friend could support you and make you feel really good about yourself, but a bad friend could cause you to self-sabotage and feel even worse than you did before. A sustainability rating could have the same effect as a good or bad friend can on a human-being.

A sustainability rating is becoming key for companies that want to make headway in the business world, and is pivotal for countries that want to develop a sustainable economy. Companies that choose to partake in the transition to a sustainable economy, and have a good sustainability rating – could bask in the glory of standing out in the market as sustainability ratings rise to prominence.

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Why else is a sustainability rating key in an economy transitioning to sustainability?

As the world inches towards greater sustainability, a sustainability rating could help the global economy in a multitude of ways:

  • Transparency and Accountability: A sustainability rating can help companies be more transparent and subsequently hold themselves more accountable to their actions, which can allow them to improve their ESG criteria – attracting new investors and customers. 
  • Business Improvement: Quantity doesn’t always mean quality. A sustainability rating can prove as a useful guideline to reveal to companies where they are excelling and where they can still improve. It’s difficult to know how a company can improve their ESG criteria without knowing where they stand, but a sustainability rating can help with that and encourage greater sustainability practices later on.
  • Competitive Edge: A good sustainability rating could do wonders for companies trying to work the market – as both customers and investors are increasingly interested in allocating their money towards companies that can demonstrate their commitment to the environment. Companies who become competitive can not only attract customers from one business to another, but secure their trust with a high sustainability rating as well.
  • Improved Access to Capital: Investors are beginning to rank sustainability as one of their most imperative criteria when choosing which companies to invest into – and instead of making them investigate the ESG criteria of a company themselves, a sustainability rating can make investing into companies easier for them. In short, less guess work or effort is needed for companies that have already acquired a high sustainability rating.
  • Better Risk Management: When sustainability issues are challenged, such as when receiving a poor sustainability rating, it can encourage companies to implement better risk management – which could also in turn help to improve their transparency and contribute to enhanced sustainability and a more resilient business operation in the midst of climate change.
  • Improved Stakeholder Engagement: A sustainability rating can help encourage stakeholders to give their input in how business operations are currently being conducted in the midst of a global economy seeking greater sustainability. Ultimately, a sustainability rating can facilitate a conversation on the current sustainable tactics being used – much like a poor test score can encourage a student to seek the help of a tutor. 
  • Long-Term Sustainable Tactics: Once a sustainability rating is provided, it can encourage companies to implement long-term tactics to address sustainability in addition to tackling their ESG issues. This can ultimately help companies to reduce business costs, improve operational efficiency, and gain new employees and customers that would have never heard of the company otherwise. A sustainability rating can influence companies to recognise the global importance of sustainability sooner rather than later, and start building the healthy habits necessary to adapt to a changing global market in the midst of climate change.

Overall, a sustainability rating can help companies to take action and accountability for their current levels of transparency – which can encourage them to improve upon their current circumstances and adapt to a growing and global sustainable economy.

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What are the cons of conducting an assessment for a sustainability rating?

There are many benefits to conducting a sustainability assessment for a sustainability rating, seeing as it can help to influence stakeholders’ decisions, address ESG criteria that needs to be improved, and help to rectify a supply chain in need of a more resilient operational model. 

However, there can be some difficulties that arise with seeking a sustainability rating. For instance, standardization is one of the biggest issues with sustainability ratings – as many companies will not be assessed to the same degree as another. Think of one student going to a rigorous, private school applying for college against a student from a public school. The level of education is subject to differ – that’s why students in the U.S. often take the SAT or ACT to ensure all students applying for higher education are graded the same way. The same cannot be said for sustainability ratings. 

This presents another one of the main issues with sustainability ratings, and it’s that many of them are developed with confirmation bias in mind – deeming the assessment futile from the start. In addition to this, many sustainability ratings have a “jetlag” if you will – as reports for sustainability ratings will often be released long after the sustainability assessment has been completed, leaving the public with a different notion of how a company may be handling sustainability and ESG criteria in the present day. This can lead to undesired greenwashing and a continued lack of transparency, both of which aren’t good for a world trying to become more sustainable.

👉 Sustainability ratings are completed with so many different systems (GRI, SASB, DJSI), that it allows for subjectivity. In this sense, sustainability ratings are very similar to high school students trying to apply for college – as it’s unfair to assess students on varying assessment criteria. 

However, this isn’t to say that a sustainability rating is useless – and many businesses can still benefit from trying to improve their scores.

How can businesses improve their sustainability ratings?

Just as with many things in the environmental and carbon accounting world, it is difficult to improve upon your company’s sustainability rating without setting clear goals. 

In order of importance, the following should be done for companies looking to improve their sustainability rating:

  1. Set clear goals on what your business aims to accomplish sustainability-wise
  2. Pick your measurement system of choice and strive for consistency 
  3. Ensure that progress is tracked so that discrepancies can be addressed and rectified for repeated improvement  

However, it is important to remember that sustainability ratings are also contingent on those who make a collaborative effort and are associated with your business – with stakeholders being the most crucial in a sustainability rating. The more a business strives to encourage stakeholders to engage, collaborate and effectively communicate with transparency – the better chance a business has at raising their sustainability rating.

An example of a company that improved their sustainability rating is Patagonia, a clothing retailer which has expressed their efforts towards sustainability time and time again – such as by seeking fair labor practices and reducing emissions. Other companies that have also successfully improved their sustainability ratings include Apple and Interface.

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What is the future for sustainability ratings?

Seeing as sustainability ratings are subject to interpretation and lack standardization, it is likely that sustainability disclosures such as the SEC Climate Disclosure Rule, CSRD, or NFRD will start to hold more value over a traditional sustainability rating. However, it is also probable that with the help of artificial intelligence, such as blockchain technology – that sustainability ratings could finally become standardised. 

In order to achieve this, regulators would have to help by providing new guidelines and mandatory frameworks that would align with the future sustainability global standards. Industries would also need to create standard-wide benchmarks to ensure fair sustainability ratings, and the current systems implemented in SASB and GRI would have to acclimate themselves to the new standards as well.

Ultimately, a sustainability rating can help companies to demonstrate their efforts (or lack thereof) towards sustainability – but the system is in dire need of reform if it wants to drive the world towards positive change that sustainability ratings currently aren’t capable of due to their need for standardization.

What about Greenly? 

If reading this article about a sustainability rating has made you interested in reducing your carbon emissions to further fight against climate change – Greenly can help you!

A sustainability rating can be discouraging if it doesn’t come out how you expected it, but fear not– Greenly is here to help you and your business understand how you can improve your sustainability rating and get the business you deserve. Book a demo with one of our specialists to learn more. 

Greenly can help you make an environmental change for the better, starting with a carbon footprint assessment to know how much carbon emissions your company produces.

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